Well, yes, good point—people consume art for all sorts of reasons.
Though I wasn’t meaning to say that anyone consciously looks at an artwork with the intention of connecting with the artist, only that it’s an implied prerequisite, as in, if we’re impressed by the skill, we’re impressed because we have a sense of how difficult that would be for a human (being a human ourselves) or if we think the work has captured an emotion we might implicitly assume that the artist recognised that same emotion in creating the work. These features of the art-consumption experience are largely absent in AI art, when we are pretty certain that the “artist” has no conscious experience.
But, yes, I take your point, and people can appreciate AI art for many reasons besides.
As somebody who makes AI “art” (largely anime tiddies tbh) recreationally, I’m not sure I agree with the notion that the emotion of an artist is not recognizeable in the work. For one, when you’re looking at least at a finished picture I’ve made, you’re looking at hours of thought and effort. I can’t draw a straight line to save my life, but I can decide what should go where, which color is the right or wrong one, and which of eight candidate pictures has particular features I like. When you’re working incrementally, img2img, for instance, it’s very common to just mix and match parts of different runs by preference. So in a finished picture, every fine detail would be drawn by the AI, but the scene setup, arrangement etc. would be a much more collaborative, deliberate process.
(If you see a character with six fingers, you’re seeing an AI artist who does not respect their craft—or who is burnt out after hours of wrangling the damn thing into submission. It’s happened tbh.)
But also—I’ve seen AI images that genuinely astonished me. I’ve seen image models do one-shots where I genuinely went, “hey, I’m picking up what you’re putting down here and I approve.” Lots of features in particular combinations that were unlikely to be directly copied from the training example but showed something like a high-level understanding of sentiment, or recognition of specific details and implications of a particular preference. It’s not something that happens often. But I have recognized sparks of true understanding in one-shot AI works. We may be closer—or possibly, simpler—than you think.
But I have recognized sparks of true understanding in one-shot AI works.
I absolutely agree here, this is what I was referring to when I wrote...
I think we can appreciate the beauty of connecting with humanity as a whole, knowing that it is the big data of humanity that has informed AI art—I suspect this is what we find so magical about it.
I suspect that AI has an appeal not just because of its fantastic rendering capacity but also the fact that it is synthesising works not just from a prompt but from a vast library of shared human experience.
you’re looking at hours of thought and effort
Regarding the arduous* process of iteratively prompting and selecting AI art, I think the analogy with photography works in terms of evoking emotions. Photographers approach their works in a similar way, shooting multiple angles and subjects and selecting those that resonate with them (and presumably others) for exhibition or publication. I think there is something special about connecting with what a human artist recognised in a piece whether it came from a camera or an algorithm. I acknowledge this is a form of connection that is still present in AI art, just as it is in photography.
* I caveat “arduous” because, while it might take hours of wrangling the AI to express something approximating what we intend, the skill that takes artists years to master—that of actually creating the work, is largely performed, in the case of AI art, by the non-sentient algorithm. It is not the hours of work that goes into one painting that impresses the viewer generally, it’s the unseen years of toil and graft that allowed the artist to make something magic within those hours. The vast majority of the magic in AI art is provided by the algorithm.
This is why I see it as analogous to photography. Still a valid art form, but not one that need make actual painting obsolete.
I think the analogy to photography works very well, in that it’s a lot easier than the workflow that it replaced, but a lot harder than it’s commonly seen as. And yeah, it’s great using a tool that lets me, in effect, graft the lower half of the artistic process to my own brain. It’s a preview of what’s coming with AI, imo—the complete commodification of every cognitive skill.
Well, yes, good point—people consume art for all sorts of reasons.
Though I wasn’t meaning to say that anyone consciously looks at an artwork with the intention of connecting with the artist, only that it’s an implied prerequisite, as in, if we’re impressed by the skill, we’re impressed because we have a sense of how difficult that would be for a human (being a human ourselves) or if we think the work has captured an emotion we might implicitly assume that the artist recognised that same emotion in creating the work. These features of the art-consumption experience are largely absent in AI art, when we are pretty certain that the “artist” has no conscious experience.
But, yes, I take your point, and people can appreciate AI art for many reasons besides.
As somebody who makes AI “art” (largely anime tiddies tbh) recreationally, I’m not sure I agree with the notion that the emotion of an artist is not recognizeable in the work. For one, when you’re looking at least at a finished picture I’ve made, you’re looking at hours of thought and effort. I can’t draw a straight line to save my life, but I can decide what should go where, which color is the right or wrong one, and which of eight candidate pictures has particular features I like. When you’re working incrementally, img2img, for instance, it’s very common to just mix and match parts of different runs by preference. So in a finished picture, every fine detail would be drawn by the AI, but the scene setup, arrangement etc. would be a much more collaborative, deliberate process.
(If you see a character with six fingers, you’re seeing an AI artist who does not respect their craft—or who is burnt out after hours of wrangling the damn thing into submission. It’s happened tbh.)
But also—I’ve seen AI images that genuinely astonished me. I’ve seen image models do one-shots where I genuinely went, “hey, I’m picking up what you’re putting down here and I approve.” Lots of features in particular combinations that were unlikely to be directly copied from the training example but showed something like a high-level understanding of sentiment, or recognition of specific details and implications of a particular preference. It’s not something that happens often. But I have recognized sparks of true understanding in one-shot AI works. We may be closer—or possibly, simpler—than you think.
Hey, again good points.
I absolutely agree here, this is what I was referring to when I wrote...
I suspect that AI has an appeal not just because of its fantastic rendering capacity but also the fact that it is synthesising works not just from a prompt but from a vast library of shared human experience.
Regarding the arduous* process of iteratively prompting and selecting AI art, I think the analogy with photography works in terms of evoking emotions. Photographers approach their works in a similar way, shooting multiple angles and subjects and selecting those that resonate with them (and presumably others) for exhibition or publication. I think there is something special about connecting with what a human artist recognised in a piece whether it came from a camera or an algorithm. I acknowledge this is a form of connection that is still present in AI art, just as it is in photography.
* I caveat “arduous” because, while it might take hours of wrangling the AI to express something approximating what we intend, the skill that takes artists years to master—that of actually creating the work, is largely performed, in the case of AI art, by the non-sentient algorithm. It is not the hours of work that goes into one painting that impresses the viewer generally, it’s the unseen years of toil and graft that allowed the artist to make something magic within those hours. The vast majority of the magic in AI art is provided by the algorithm.
This is why I see it as analogous to photography. Still a valid art form, but not one that need make actual painting obsolete.
I think the analogy to photography works very well, in that it’s a lot easier than the workflow that it replaced, but a lot harder than it’s commonly seen as. And yeah, it’s great using a tool that lets me, in effect, graft the lower half of the artistic process to my own brain. It’s a preview of what’s coming with AI, imo—the complete commodification of every cognitive skill.